The axing of Lyon comes just two matches after he’d replaced Zampa in the side for the series opener in Sydney.

The pair are jockeying to be Australia’s frontline spinner at this year’s World Cup and despite going wicketless in the opening two games, Lyon had earned praise from skipper Aaron Finch.

“I think he’s been really impressive,” Finch said this afternoon, before the off-spinner’s axing was announced.

“Obviously not getting a wicket, he’d have liked a bit more return for that.

“When he keeps bowling that well, he will get rewarded eventually.”

Kohli, Dhoni too good for the Aussies

Behrendorff put his first-class career on hold this summer and eased back to top-level cricket via the limited-overs formats after another crippling back injury.

While he still harbours ambitions to play Test cricket one day, the left-armer says his white-ball only approach this season has been vindicated by his inclusions in both Australia’s ODI and T20 sides.

"It's something we spoke about at length at the end of last season in particular, because I've had recurrent (injuries), the same ones over the last couple of years," Behrendorff said in November.

"It's a decision we didn't make lightly but something we thought, for the longevity of my career, to give me a bit more time now (to recover) has been really good."

Victory for the Australians on Friday would hand them their first series win in almost two years having won just four of their past 23 one-day internationals.

Having re-jigged their batting line-up in the series around recalls for Usman Khawaja and Peter Handscomb, Finch said the improvement in his side’s batting has been the major positive of the series so far.

But the skipper added securing the trophy on Friday night, after losing campaigns against England (twice), India, South Africa, New Zealand and at the Champions Trophy, was his side’s major focus.